Christ Church Cathedral (Montreal)

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Christ Church Cathedral, with the Tour KPMG office tower behind it
Christ Church Cathedral, with the Tour KPMG office tower behind it

Christ Church Cathedral is an Anglican cathedral in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, the seat of the Anglican Diocese of Montreal.

A cathedral by this name was formerly located on Notre-Dame Street in Old Montreal. It had been designated as the cathedral for the new Diocese of Montreal when the Diocese of Montreal was separated from the Diocese of Quebec. The original Christ Church Cathedral was destroyed by fire in 1856.

The present cathedral, an Neo-gothic structure, was designed by architect Frank Wills, who also designed Christ Church Cathedral in Fredericton, New Brunswick. It was completed in 1859 and consecrated in 1867.

Unfortunately, the design, though acclaimed for its architecture, suffered from important engineering flaws. The soft ground could not support the heavy central stone tower and steeple, which began to subside and lean. This defect formed the basis of an important lawsuit (Wardle v. Bethune) often cited as precedent relating to Article 1688 of the Quebec Civil Code. The steeple had to be removed in 1927. New foundations were poured in 1939, and in 1940, an anonymous donation permitted the construction of a much lighter steeple made of aluminum, moulded to simulate the former stone spire. It is 28 metres high, attaining a height of 70 metres off the ground.

Recent additions to the church include a choir gallery, built in 1980, and the church's third organ, completed in 1981.

[edit] Mall development

Another chapter in the cathedral's architecture occurred in the 1980s, when the Anglican diocese, the Cathedral, and the Canadian Bible Society entered into two agreements with property developers to permit the construction of a 34-storey office tower behind the cathedral as well as an underground shopping mall beneath it. This required the cathedral to be braced with a complicated series of pre-stressed concrete columns and beams, which supported the building in mid-air while the shopping mall was excavated.

Construction began in February 1987 and was completed in November of the same year. The office tower is known as the Tour KPMG, formerly Maison des Coopérants or Place de la Cathédrale, with the shopping mall being called the Promenades Cathédrale. The construction of the mall, integrated into the underground city, involved modifications to the McGill metro station.

The office tower includes space for the Diocesan offices, and the mall includes a Canadian Bible Society outlet, an Anglican bookstore and a space called the Undercroft which includes the cathedral's Sunday school, drop-in centre, and practice rooms. The rent paid to the Church, approximately $400,000, helps to pay for the upkeep of the cathedral. Views of the office tower's façade reflecting and enhancing the church have become iconic of Montreal and are often seen on postcards and photographic albums.

Christ Church Cathedral is the regimental church of the Montreal infantry regiment The Canadian Grenadier Guards, and retired colours of the Regiment are on display in an alcove inside the cathedral.

The cathedral is located at 635 Sainte-Catherine Street, with its offices at 1444 Union Avenue (McGill metro station), in the city's central business district.

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